“Managing Irrationality: Some Observations on Behavioral

“Managing Irrationality: Some Observations on Behavioral

Federal Trade Commission Managing Irrationality: Some Observations on Behavioral Economics and the Creation of the Consumer Financial Protection Agency Remarks of J. Thomas Rosch Commissioner, Federal Trade Commission Conference on the Regulation of Consumer Financial Products New York, New York January 6, 2010 I. As some critics have noted,1 the White House’s proposal to establish a new Consumer Financial Protection Agency (CFPA) seems to be based – at least in part – on behavioral economics theory. Consequently, I’d like to briefly discuss my own views about that theory. I have five observations in this regard. First, insofar as antitrust is concerned, behavioral economics is relatively new. The views stated here are my own and do not necessarily reflect the views of the Commission or other Commissioners. I am grateful to my attorney advisors, Amanda Reeves and Beth Delaney, for their invaluable assistance preparing this paper. I presented Part I and Part II of these remarks at the Conference’s morning and afternoon sessions, respectively. 1 See, e.g., Richard A. Posner, “Treating Financial Consumers as Consenting Adults,” THE WALL STREET JOURNAL (July 22, 2009) (“The plan of the new agency reveals the influence of ‘behavioral economics,’ which teaches that people, even when fully informed often screw up because of various cognitive limitations.”); Simon Johnson, “The Dark Side of Behavioral Economics,” The New Republic (July 29, 2009), available at http://www.tnr.com/blog/the-plank/the-dark-side-behavioral-economics. 1 When I practiced antitrust law in San Francisco in the mid-1970s, the economic theory du jour was so-called “Chicago School” theory as explicated by Robert Bork in The Antitrust Paradox2 and Richard Posner in Antitrust Law: An Economic Perspective. 3 The central tenets of Chicago School theory were pretty simple: first, sellers and buyers both acted rationally – sellers trying to maximize their profits and buyers trying to maximize their bargains; second, as a result, Chicago School theory assumed that imperfect markets would self-correct rather quickly; and third, rational sellers would recognize that predatory conduct was not in their self-interest. Over the years, some so-called “post Chicago School” economists spoke up. But those scholars simply expanded the range of conduct that might be considered rational and profit-maximizing to include some predatory conduct that would raise rivals’ costs, increase entry barriers, or exclude rivals cheaply.4 Although these theorists did offer a more sophisticated, nuanced view of seller behavior than the orthodox Chicago School, they did not undermine the basic assumption that sellers and buyers alike acted rationally. Indeed, I think it is safe to say that, for the last 40 or so years, the Chicago School’s fundamental premise that individuals behave as rational profit maximizers was 2 ROBERT H. BORK, THE ANTITRUST PARADOX: A POLICY AT WAR WITH ITSELF (1978). 3 RICHARD POSNER, ANTITRUST LAW: AN ECONOMIC PERSPECTIVE (1976). 4 Some examples are (1) Salop’s “raising rivals’ costs” theories, see, e.g., Thomas G. Krattenmaker & Steven Salop, Anticompetitive Exclusion: Raising Rivals’ Costs to Achieve Power Over Price, 96 YALE L. J. 209 (1986); Michael H. Riordan & Steven C. Salop, Evaluating Vertical Mergers: A Post-Chicago Approach, 63 ANTIRUST L. J. 513, 519-22 (1995); Steven C. Salop & R. Craig Romaine, Preserving Monopoly: Economic Analysis, Legal Standards, and Microsoft, 7 GEO. MASON L. REV. 617, 626-28 (1999); (2) Whinston’s “tying” theories, see, e.g., Michael D. Whinston, Tying, Foreclosure, and Exclusion, 80 AM. ECON. REV. 837 (1990); Michael D. Whinston, Exclusivity and Tying in U.S. v. Microsoft: What We Know, and Don’t Know, 15 J. ECON. PERSP. 63, 79 (Spring 2001); and (3) Creighton’s “cheap exclusion” theories, see Susan A. Creighton et al., Cheap Exclusion, 72 ANTITRUST L. J. 975 (2005). 2 not seriously questioned. I date the Chicago School’s primacy to the Supreme Court’s embrace of Chicago School way of thinking in its 1977 GTE Sylvania decision; there the Court overturned its 1967 decision in Schwinn and held that non-price vertical restraints were subject to the rule of reason.5 More recently, however, as Professor Maurice Stucke and others have written,6 a number of economists have begun to suggest that all market participants might not behave rationally after all. Instead, these economists have suggested that there are certain “predictably irrational” ways in which humans behave, by, for instance, overvaluing their prospect of success in a risky situation and undervaluing their likelihood of loss in such a situation. These insights, to me at least, ring true because, however rational we may all try to be, we have all taken actions – often consciously – that we know are not in our 5 United States v. Arnold, Schwinn & Co., 388 U.S. 365 (1967), overruled by Continental T.V., Inc. v. GTE Sylvania, 433 U.S. 36 (1977). The Court cited then Professor Posner’s Antitrust Law, as support for the proposition that economists had identified several ways in which manufacturers use non-price vertical restraints to compete against other manufacturers. GTE Sylvania, 433 U.S. at 54-55. The Court noted that Economists have identified a number of ways in which manufacturers can use such restrictions to compete more effectively against other manufacturers . Service and repair are vital for many products, such as automobiles and major household appliances. The availability and quality of such services affect a manufacturer's goodwill and the competitiveness of his product. Because of market imperfections such as the so-called “free rider” effect, these services might not be provided by retailers in a purely competitive situation, despite the fact that each retailer's benefit would be greater if all provided the services than if none did. Id. at 55. Relying solely on economic theory, the Court found that a manufacturer’s limitation of intrabrand competition actually aided that manufacturer in the interbrand market. Id. at 56. 6 See, e.g., Maurice E. Stucke, New Antitrust Realism, Global Competition Policy (January 2009); Maurice E. Stucke, Behavioral Economics at the Gate: Antitrust in the Twenty-First Century, 38 LOY. U. CHI. L. J. 513 (Spring 2007). See also Avishalom Tor, the Fable of Entry, Bounded Rationality, Market Discipline, and Legal Policy, 101 MICH. L. REV. 482 (Nov. 2002) 3 “wealth-maximizing self-interest,” but which we pursue anyway. I am intrigued by the prospect of incorporating these insights into the Commission’s approach to antitrust and consumer protection law. Second, behavioral economics has been described as having more relevance on the buy side – that is to say, in analyzing consumer behavior – than on the sell side.7 For example, George Akerlof and Robert Shiller’s recent New York Times bestseller Animal Sprits, which focuses on behavioral economics, argues that free-market ideology is fundamentally incomplete because it fails to account for the fact that human irrationality infects human decision-making on the buy side and, thus infects decisions that govern how the market actually (as opposed to hypothetically) functions.8 Other best sellers have taken the same approach.9 Similarly, in describing their disappointment about the recent financial crisis, previous disciples of Chicago School economics have directed their statements towards buyers, rather than sellers. In his testimony before Congress in October 2008, for example, Alan Greenspan recanted his faith in the market and the rationality of business people, testifying that more government regulation of the financial sector was both necessary and proper.10 Similarly, in Jones v. Harris, a securities case which is now at 7 See Economics Roundtable, Global Competition Review (March 2009). 8 GEORGE A. AKERLOF & ROBERT J. SHILLER, ANIMAL SPIRITS: HOW HUMAN PSYCHOLOGY DRIVES THE ECONOMY, AND WHY IT MATTERS FOR GLOBAL CAPITALISM (2009). 9 See, e.g., DAN ARIELY, PREDICTABLY IRRATIONAL: THE HIDDEN FORCES THAT SHAPE OUR DECISIONS (HarperCollins 2009); JUSTIN FOX, THE MYTH OF THE RATIONAL MARKET: A HISTORY OF RISK, REWARD, AND DELUSION ON WALL STREET (HarperCollins 2009). 10 Edmund L. Andrews, “Greenspan Concedes Error in Regulation,” NEW YORK TIMES, Oct. 23, 2008, available at 4 the Supreme Court, Judge Posner himself recently advanced a behavioral economics approach – and sharply rejected Chief Judge Easterbrook’s free-market theory – in his dissent from the Seventh Circuit’s denial of rehearing en banc.11 Consistent with the behavioral economics literature, Posner observed that, in the absence of a competitive market, regulation is needed to protect consumers because market participants are not infallible.12 And certainly the regulatory failures alleged by the CFPA’s proponents have been based on concerns about inadequate consumer protection. Third, as a former Director of the FTC’s Bureau of Consumer Protection, I agree that consumers do not always behave rationally. The Supreme Court long ago recognized as much in 1937 when it held that the standard for liability in judging consumer fraud should be the “least sophisticated consumer” test.13 Under that test, the courts http://www.nytimes.com/2008/10/24/business/economy/24panel.html (Greenspan stating that he is in a state of “shock and disbelief” at what has happened and that he has found a “flaw” in his ideology and is “very distressed by that fact.”). 11 Jones v. Harris Assocs. L.P. (“Jones II”), 527 F.3d 728, 729 (7th Cir. 2008) (Posner, J., dissenting from denial of rehearing en banc). Writing for a unanimous panel, Chief Judge Frank Easterbrook had applied a stringent standard to hold that mutual fund shareholders could not sue their financial advisers for exacerbating their losses during the financial meltdown. Jones v. Harris Assocs. L.P. (“Jones I”), 527 F.3d 627 (7th Cir. 2008). In so holding, Easterbrook advanced a classical law-and-economics analysis that presumed a well-functioning market for investment advice, dismissed possibly irrational investor behavior, and concluded with a call for greater deregulation of the industry.

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